51 P. 770 | Idaho | 1897
This is an action to foreclose a mortgage executed by J. B. Green and Jessie W. Green, busband and wife, in favor of the appellant corporation. Green and wife made default. One W. B. King was made a defendant, but filed a disclaimer of any interest in the subject matter of said suit. W. Mackintosh intervened, and demanded the foreclosure of a subsequent mortgage executed by said Green and wife upon the same property as described in the first-mentioned mortgage, and claimed priority of lien on account of a defective ac-Jmowledgment of the prior mortgage. Appellant answered the complaint of intervener, and denied the assignment of the subsequent mortgage to the intervener, and alleged actual knowledge of the prior mortgage by the assignor of the intervener prior to the execution of the subsequent mortgage. Appellant also claimed title to the premises in dispute by virtue of a tax deed duly executed in favor of one W. H. King, and a quitclaim deed from said King to appellant. On the issues made, a trial was had, and judgment went in favor of the intervener. This appeal is from the judgment.
Two questions are presented by this appeal: 1. Is the mortgage which this action was brought to foreclose valid? and 2. Is the tax deed referred to in the pleadings valid ?
The mortgage was executed by Jessie W. Green and J. B. Green, husband and wife, in favor of the appellant corporation, either on the separate property of the wife, or community property. It was on property that was occupied by the mortgagors as a residence. The trial court held that said mortgage was void for the reason that it was not acknowledged by the wife and certified in the manner required by section 2956 of the Bevised Statutes, which declares that the acknowledgment of a married woman to an instrument must not be taken unless she is made acquainted by the officer with the contents of the instrument on an examination without the hearing of her husband, nor certified unless she acknowledges to the officer that she executed the same, and that she does not wish to retract such execution. The certificate of acknowledgment is as follows :
*663 "State of Idaho,
County of Bingham.
"On this twenty-third day of August, 1892, personally appeared before me, H. B. Kinport, a notary public in and for said county, Jessie W. Green and J. B. Green, husband and wife, known to me to be the identical persons described in, and who executed, the foregoing instrument, and who acknowledged to me that they executed the same freely and voluntarily, and for the uses and purposes therein mentioned. And the said J. B. Green, having been by me first made acquainted with the contents of said instrument, acknowledged to me, on examination apart from, and without the hearing of, his wife, that he subscribed to the same freely and voluntarily, without fear or compulsion, or undue influence of Ms wife, and that he has no wish to retract the execution of the same. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal, at Pocatello, the day and year in tMs certificate first above mentioned.
"H. B. KINPORT,
"Notary Public.”
It is shown by said certificate that the officer who made it took the acknowledgment of J. B. Green, the husband, separate and apart from the wife. The wife’s acknowledgment was not taken separate and apart from the husband, as required by section 2956 of the Revised Statutes, if the recitals in the certificate be true; and, as the reformation of said certificate is not asked for, the conclusion is that it states the facts of acknowledgment correctly. Under the provisions of sections 2956, 2960 of the Revised Statutes, said acknowledgment is void. (See Danglarde v. Elias, 80 Cal. 65, 22 Pac. 69.)
The second point raised is as to the validity of the tax deed. It is urged by the respondent that the tax deed was void for the reason that the assessment was not made in the manner required by law, and the court below so held. Under the provisions of section 1555 of the Revised Statutes, a tax deed, regular upon its face, and containing the recitals necessary in the certificate of sale, is prima facie evidence of existence of the facts set forth in the eight subdivisions of said section, the first of which is,